
Jacques Charrier
Biography
Jacques Charrier (November 6, 1936 – September 3, 2025) was a French actor in both film and the theater, a film producer, and an artist in painting and ceramics. He was married to film actress Brigitte Bardot from 1959 to 1963. In 1980 he returned to the School of Fine Arts, and went back to painting that was full of references to his two passions, travel and antiquity. His art work has been regularly exhibited in Paris, Geneva and San Francisco. With the publication of the memoirs of Brigitte Bardot, he found himself in the media spotlight. He sued for "violation of privacy", and was successful. In 1959, he married Brigitte Bardot; they had one son, Nicolas-Jacques Charrier, before divorcing in 1963. In 1964, he married France Louis-Dreyfus, of the Louis-Dreyfus family, with whom he had two daughters, Sophie and Marie, before divorcing in 1967. In 1982, he met his third wife Linda with whom he had one daughter, Rosalie. Since 2009, he has been married to Japanese artist Makiko Kumano. Since 1997 he has lived in Paris. Source: Article "Jacques Charrier" from Wikipedia in english, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Also Known As
Movie Appearances

The Itchy Palm
as Michel
1960

The Cheaters
as Robert 'Bob' Letellier
1958

The Chasers
as Freddy
1959

It Happened All Night
as serveur restaurant
1960

Babette Goes to War
as Gérard de Crécy
1959

Carmen di Trastevere
as Antonio, le Policier
1962

The Third Lover
as Albin Mercier
1962

Because, Because of a Woman
as Remy Fertet
1963

L'Affaire Lourdes
as Peyrebat
1967

The Seven Deadly Sins
as Antoine (segment "L'avarice")
1962

Winter Wind
as Marko Lazar
1969

The Suns of Easter Island
as Alain
1972

À belles dents
as Jean-Loup Costa
1966

Marie Soleil
as Axel
1964
La Troisième Mi-temps
as Vincent Navailles
1981

The Real Bargain
as The married man
1965

Closed Shutters
as Thomas
1973

Pigeon Shoot
as Marco Laudato
1961
Anatomy of a Marriage
as Jean-Marc
TBA

The Oldest Profession
as John Demetrius (segment "Anticipation, ou l'amour en l'an 2000")
1967


